-Caveat Lector-

Christian Science Monitor
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2000


USA
A backlash to 'bully' America

Other nations increasingly unite in criticizing US
clout, as Washington wields unparalleled power on
world stage.

Justin Brown ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

WASHINGTON



Rarely in history has a country been as powerful as
the United States is today. And that may be taking a
toll on the rest of the world.

While the US expands its global reach - militarily,
economically, and culturally - other countries are
increasingly growing wary of US dominance, and seeking
more balance in a world they see as unipolar. US
rivals like Russia, China, Iran, and Cuba have been
trumpeting those concerns for years. But their calls
of late have become more focused and unified.

"Just as there should not be only one color in the
world, so there should not be only one civilization,
one social system, one development model, or one set
of values in the world," said Chinese President Jiang
Zemin at last week's United Nations summit, where
complaints of the US overreaching its bounds created
an undercurrent of unrest.

Fears of US dominance have also taken firmer root in
more America-friendly countries that are gradually
trying to assert themselves, such as Japan, India, and
France.

Over the past year, for example, French Foreign
Minister Hubert Vedrine has begun to refer to the US
as a "hyper-power."

Some developing countries, furthermore, complain that
they are too often bullied by the US and European
Union, which they accuse of trying to dictate the pace
and means of their development. Those laments were
heard at last year's meeting of the World Trade
Organization in Seattle, and again this week at a
World Economic Forum meeting in Melbourne, Australia.

Part of the reason for the growing resentment against
the US is its continued military presence around the
globe. The US-led interventions - in Yugoslavia more
than a year ago and ongoing in Iraq - haven't helped.

But other issues are causing grumbling as well,
including the recent US decision to help fund
Colombia's drug war against rebels in the south, a
topic that drew strong criticism at a meeting of Latin
American countries in Brazil last month.

Then there's national missile defense. Both allies and
potential rivals are concerned at the prospect of
either a US advantage in strategic weaponry or a
renewed arms race. President Clinton deferred a
decision to deploy the system, but development
continues, and the next president will have to address
the subject.

The US has also rejected popularly supported
international initiatives, including the formation of
a permanent international court to try accused war
criminals, an agreement to ban nuclear-weapons
testing, and a proposal to outlaw landmines.

Patrick Cronin, a national-security expert at the US
Institute for Peace in Washington, says it's natural
for the rest of the world to rally against a nation
when it gets too strong.

"You can get away with unilateralism for only the
briefest of times," he says. "You can't have it both
ways - pushing for greater globalization but not
supporting things like an international court or the
United Nations."

The hegemony problem is likely to be a crucial
foreign-policy issue for the nation's next chief
executive to confront.

"One of the most important things the next president
will have to do is strengthen our alliances and
explain to other countries why our presence is needed
around the world," says John Hulsman, a foreign-policy
expert at the Washington-based Heritage Foundation.

Mr. Hulsman likens the role of the US to that of a
chairman of the board - someone who can call the
shots, but who can't get anything done without
support.

Yet in recent months other countries have shown that
they are willing to take on international issues
without US help.

Japan and Russia recently met to try to resolve their
ongoing dispute over the Kurile Islands, which were
taken by the Soviet Union at the end of World War II.
Until recently it would have been unthinkable for such
a meeting to take place without some form of outside
mediation - probably by the US.

In one of the world's most dangerous nuclear
flashpoints, Kashmir, an increasingly assertive India
is insisting that the US keep out of any negotiation
with rival Pakistan (See story).

Even Germany, a strong ally, is beginning to demand
more of a say in world affairs.

"A state cannot simply stand back from its strategic
potential, from the size of its population and
economic power, and ignore its geopolitical
situation," German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer
said recently in an appeal to get his country a
permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.

Japan and India have also appealed for permanent
Security-Council seats.

Still, it is apparent that a strong US role is
essential in some parts of the world.

North Korean President Kim Jong Il recently surprised
observers by telling South Korean President Kim Dae
Jung that US troops were needed on the peninsula, even
as tensions decreased - in part to prevent a power
vacuum.

Also, analysts say, it is apparent that the US is the
only country with the strength and reputation to
broker a deal between the Israelis and Arabs in the
Middle East.

"The need for American mediation won't go away," says
Thomas Smerling, the Washington director of the Israel
Policy Forum. "The US is the only country with the
trust of both sides."

http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2000/09/14/fp1s1-csm.shtml



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